Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Growing up in South Africa we always had marmite. Exactly the same stuff as here except it always seemed easier to spread. I think this may be because of the warmer temperature.


I thought marmite would have just spread around the world with the colonies. Kinda like syphilis.


Anyway I ran out of marmite about 3 months ago and the gods seem to be conspiring against my ever getting another jar. Every time I go to a shop I forget about it and come out with superfluous rubbish like jars of antipasti and that foreign beer that I just had to try but no marmite. I also ran out of marmalade this morning so all I had on my toast was margarine. MARGARINE I TELL YOU! SHITE margarine at that!:(

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/1131-marmite/#findComment-29598
Share on other sites

did anyone read of the marmite correspondences in the Independent that went on for the best part of last year? Marvellous, I shall try and unearth some gems.

FWIW spanish born and bred, but any culture beloved of anchovies, olives and salted cod is always going to embrace marmite...well I did anyway.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/1131-marmite/#findComment-29600
Share on other sites

ChavWivaLawDegree Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I was brought up on and love Marmite and my

> Jamaican bf thinks it's disgusting. He says it's

> typically 'English' but my St. Lucian friend was

> also brought up on it. Is it mostly an English

> thing, or are there any of you guys from far flung

> places that also grew up with Marmite?


Our poliics may be on different wavelengths but our tastes ageree - Marmite is an essential store cupboard item, Desert Island luxury (forget the records) and perfect on toasted sourdough from the stall on Northcross Road. Can't understand why it's not sold more often in cafes fro breakfast.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/1131-marmite/#findComment-29621
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • 🤣 Yes, I can't imagine they'd thank you for that. Sounds like keeping the car is probably the right thing for you.
    • That ULEZ check is not necessarily accurate, as someone pointed out above. I did it ages ago. I don't cycle. I got a bike, had a space in a bike shelter (in fact requested one on our road), had a disastrous lesson from someone who appeared to think I was about nine years old, fell off and gave up. A refugee now has my bike and someone else has my space in the shelter thing. Our tent is too big to easily take on public transport, let alone all the other stuff. If you travel light, good for you, but my backpacking days are long gone, as are my days of happily sleeping in a tent I can't stand up in! I didn't know about this zip car point to point option. Is that to anywhere in the UK? Thanks but I did all the sums when I decided to keep the car, and the convenience for me outweighed the obviously considerable annual  cost. I don't think an Uber driver would be very happy to convey things like bags of smelly compost to my allotment 🤣 Which I can take on the bus but it's somewhat embarrassing 🤣
    • If you think about the amount you spend on keeping and using a car and how infrequently you use it, you might be better just getting the occasional Uber. We often underestimate the cost of owning a car, as opposed to using a cab. There is actually a name for it in Psychology ('the taxi meter effect'). It's likely you're spending at least £1000 - £1,500 a year on keeping a car (£500 on insurance, £200 on MOT and service / repairs, £180 on VED, Then the ULEZ fee each time you use it, plus fuel, plus depreciation... maybe minimal in this case). If you put that in a separate 'pot' and used it to cover the occasional Uber, you may find your needs more than covered. 
    • Yes, En Root are excellent.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...